December jobs: 1.8 million jobs created in 2012

By Jill Schlesinger

January 4, 2013 / 4:27 PM
/ MoneyWatch

(MoneyWatch) The last jobs report of the year confirmed a 2-year trend of good but not great progress. In December, 155,000 jobs were created and the unemployment rate matched November's revised 7.8 percent. For all of 2012, the economy added an average of 153,000 per month for a total of about 1.8 million jobs, almost exactly the number created in 2011.

The reason that we have not seen more robust job creation is due to sub-par economic growth, which has been hovering at around 2 percent for two years. The economy needs to grow by closer to 3
percent to create the hundreds of thousands of jobs per month required to dramatically lower unemployment and get more of those 12 million unemployed back on their feet.

5-year snapshot:

The December jobs report marked the 5th anniversary of the beginning of the "Great Recession", which makes now a good time to provide a snapshot of labor market progress. Beginning in December 2007 through December 2012, the U.S. economy shed a total of approximately 3.9 million jobs, of which the government accounted for a quarter and the private sector three-quarters. A devastating 8 million jobs were lost in 2008 and 2009, before the recovery created 4.7 million over the last three years. In other words, the job market has come a long way from the dark days of the Great Recession, but has a lot more ground to cover.

U.S. job creation 2008-2012 (BLS)
BLS

For 2013, economists predict that average monthly job growth should increase only slightly to 165,000 and the annual average unemployment rate will be 7.7 percent. Expectations are muted due to the second phase of the so-called "fiscal cliff" negotiations, which will focus on focus on a reduction in government spending in order to address the nation's mushrooming $16 trillion debt burden.

It's important to underscore that when the government spends fewer dollars, it creates a negative impact on economic growth. J.P. Morgan chief U.S. economist Michael Feroli expects that fiscal cliff issues "will probably hold things back awhile." The extent of the damage depends entirely on the amount of reduction and the pace at which it will occur. Throughout the fiscal cliff debate, critics of tax increases and spending cuts worried that the dual effect would throw the country into another recession.

Bill Black, associate professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City recently noted in a Naked Capitalism post that a dramatic reduction in government spending could inflict "austerity at a time when it is likely to throw the nation into a gratuitous recession...We have all seen austerity force the Eurozone into a gratuitous recession in which Italy, Spain, and Greece have Great Depression levels of unemployment...austerity is a policy that is the self-destructive economic analogy to the medical insanity of bleeding patients."

Now that the patient (the U.S. economy) has survived trauma (the financial crisis) and intensive care (the Great Recession), it would be a shame to derail the recovery progress.

December jobs report

-- Jobs created: +155K (Revisions from Nov and Dec: +14K)

-- Private jobs created: +168K

-- Government jobs lost: -13K

-- Unemployment rate: 7.8 percent (Nov revised up to 7.8 percent)

-- Broad unemployment rate: 14.4 percent (includes the official rate plus "marginally attached workers," those who are neither working nor looking for work, but say they want a job and have looked for work recently; and people who are employed part-time for economic reasons, meaning they want full-time work but took a part-time schedule instead because that's all they could find)

Editor's note: CBS MoneyWatch initially published an Associated Press story on the unemployment report, which we have since replaced with this staff-written article. You can find the initial AP report and reader comments here.

View all articles by Jill Schlesinger on CBS MoneyWatch »Jill Schlesinger, CFP®, is the Emmy-nominated, Business Analyst for CBS News. She covers the economy, markets, investing and anything else with a dollar sign on TV, radio (including her nationally syndicated radio show), the web and her blog, "Jill on Money." Prior to her second career at CBS, Jill spent 14 years as the co-owner and Chief Investment Officer for an independent investment advisory firm. She began her career as a self-employed options trader on the Commodities Exchange of New York, following her graduation from Brown University.